The 8 Fastest Ways To Kill Your Leads
Gali Soudak
CEO @ Daze ★ Growth Expert ★ Digital Marketing Strategist ★ Helping Tech-Firms Generate Highly Targeted Leads ★ Sales Teams Trainer
Acquiring a lead takes a lot of work. First, you must invest considerable time and resources into creating and launching a demand generation campaign. Then, once you’ve captured a prospect’s attention, you need digital assets that draw them in for more. Then, slowly and carefully, you move that lead through the buying journey, ultimately converting your lead into a customer. Unfortunately, turning a lead cold doesn’t take as much energy. It can happen almost overnight. And once lost, it may be impossible to get that lead back.
This article will examine eight of the fastest ways to lose leads and how to make sure it doesn’t happen.
#1. Lack Of Discovery About The Needs Of The Company
One of the fastest ways to turn your lead cold is not understanding what the company needs. Far too often, marketers focus on their product or service, failing to notice what the lead is looking for and what problems they need to solve.
The research you do in advance of your outreach campaign is more general–identifying your target customers and what types of messaging and content resonate. With a lead, you have to get specific.
Demonstrate that you’ve done your homework–that you know something about the company’s industry, challenges, and goals. Your lead will feel that you want to build a long-term relationship and not just make a quick sale.
#2. Leaky Sales Funnel
Lead generation is costly, but your company’s revenue takes a bigger hit from those leads that fall out of your leaky marketing funnel. The reality is that larger buyer groups and longer sales cycles present challenges, including a more complex buyer funnel that can quickly sprout leaks. Your first step in fixing a leaky sales funnel is to find the leak.
Here are some things to look for:
Unclear value proposition–you don’t explain why a lead should buy from you rather than a competitor. You’re not differentiating yourself from your competitors. Your communications don’t demonstrate that you understand your customer’s pain points.
There’s no lead nurturing process in place. Everyone is free to manage a prospect independently, with no coordination between marketing and sales.
Your marketing material is inconsistent. For example, your ad copy describes your product or service differently from your website copy or social media posts.
Poor UX. Your website pages load too slowly, are not optimized for mobile, the information is unclear, and CTAs are weak.
Lead follow-up is poorly organized or untimely. Surveys show that 80% of potential leads are lost due solely to poor follow-up.
#3. Hard Sell Too Soon
Nurturing your lead into a customer requires trust in you, your company, and what you offer. It’s a delicate process that requires patience. Depending on your product or service, it could take at least four months before you have a sale.
领英推荐
Early in the relationship, you want to focus on giving—on investing in what you hope will be a fruitful outcome.
#4. No Personalization/Segmentation
When a lead provides contact information, it signals that they are ready to engage in a conversation. At this point, you need to shift from a demand generation mindset to one that is segmented and personalized.
#5. You’re Not Using The Right Channels Or Delivering The Wrong Content
Where are your leads spending most of their time? LinkedIn outreach may have been the first step in developing the relationship. But, ultimately, you’ll move to email communication. Is your email follow-up effective? Are your emails nurturing your lead through the funnel?
What other channels are your leads using to gather information and find solutions for their problems??
What type of content seems to resonate more with your leads?
If you’re spending too much time in the wrong places and publishing content that doesn’t resonate with your lead, you’ll lose their interest, and they’ll move on to other suppliers.
#6. Substandard Follow-up Content
Substandard follow-up content is a clear signal that you’re not ready to invest the time in nurturing your lead. It also demonstrates that you’re not professional. Your follow-up content should be in-depth, precise, correct, engaging, and error-free. Different topics appeal to your lead depending on where they are in the buying journey. Therefore, your follow-up content shouldn’t be generic. Generic content demonstrates that you haven’t done your homework and are not focused on the unique needs of your lead.
#7. Unresponsive Or Slow To Respond On Social Media And Review Sites
Word-of-mouth marketing still rules the business world today. The difference is that those conversations about you take place on the internet. Within less than a few minutes, a negative comment about you or your company can spread worldwide.
B2B decision-makers move through virtually all buyer journey stages online in our hyper-digitized world. In addition, as current research proves, B2B buyers have become comfortable purchasing products or services online. As a result, the entire communication thread with you can be entirely digital.
These transitions in the buying process mean that you must have your eyes on your social media and review platforms and your website. A slow response to questions, clarifications, or complaints can result in your lead going to a competitor. According to an Impact Plus study, marketers who follow up within 5 minutes of receiving an online communication are 9x more likely to convert that lead into a customer.
#8. Taking Too Long To Answer Questions
Unless you’re the only vendor of a particular product or service, you can be certain that your leads are exploring other companies. According to research, 30-50% of sales are earned by the vendor that responds first. You can quickly kill a lead simply by taking too long to return a phone call, email, or direct message. Try to answer your lead’s questions as soon as you see them, within a few hours if possible, but no more than 24 hours later.
Conclusion
You can kill a lead in a fraction of the time it took you to acquire it. Not only do you lose out on the revenue a sale could bring, but you also cause a deficit in the budget from wasted time and campaign expenses. It’s worth the effort to do an audit to identify and repair any deficiencies in your lead nurturing strategy.